UDC 904:726.596"652/653"(398)
726.596.033.1(398)
DOI: 10.2298/STA0656223I
223
OLIVERA ILI]
Institute of Archaeology, Belgrade
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES
IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM*
Abstract. – This paper discusses early Christian baptistries in the territory of northern Illyricum, which are dated
to the period from the 4th to the beginning of the 7th century. The analysis of architectural shapes, positions and decorative
elements makes it possible to define the basic types of baptistries, and their chronological attribution. The results of the analysis
provides insight into the local specifics of the rite of baptism itself. Likewise, an attempt has been made to reconstruct
the liturgical procedures that accompanied it.
Key words. – Early Christian baptistries, piscines, northern Illyricum, conversion, 4th – to the beginning of the 7th century.
T
he early Christian baptistries, their position
and appearance, shed light in their own way
not only on the place and significance of the
church building where they were or to which they were
attached, they also reveal the method of baptism itself
and the specific local features that were often reflected
in their spatial articulation. Adapted to the most
essential needs of the rite of baptism, they are simple
rooms, frequently with an irregular ground plan and
sometimes with no inside decorative elements, at all.
Though exhibiting great diversity in their design, in
most cases, they constitute part of the church building
itself; however, in a few cases they occur as separate
buildings. In the period of Late Antiquity, they were
not unique to this region but were a common feature
throughout the broader Mediterranean region.
Although research in the domain of early Christian
archaeology in our country, both of ecclesiastical
architecture and decorative stone masonry, either of
structural elements or church furnishings, commenced
at the end of the 19th century,1 we are still far from
solving many of the questions the surviving monuments pose. Not many early Christian baptistries have
been discovered in the regions of present-day Serbia or
Montenegro, so far. Research papers have dealt with
them as a separate topic on only two occasions.
In 1962, A. Khatchatrian published a collection
with over 400 baptistries and baptismal piscines (with
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plans, descriptions and bibliographies), from countries
across the entire Christian world of that era, dating
from the 3rd to the 7th century.2 Khatchatrian divided the
baptistries she described into five groups, according to
the geographical regions they belonged to (1. Syria,
Palestine, Egypt; 2. Mesopotamia, Asia Minor, the Crimea, the Caucasus; 3. the Balkans, Greece, Constantinople; 4. Roman Africa, Spain, Italy, Dalmatia, Gaul,
Switzerland, Germany), with all their features, principally bearing in mind the typological features of the
monuments themselves. This vast material lacks a
more detailed analysis of their designs and the spatial
ensemble of their architecture, or reference to the origins of the individual types of these buildings, a point
the author, in any case, underlines in her work.3
* The term northern Illyricum is used in this paper exclusively
as a geographical definition for the territories of the present-day
countries of Serbia and Montenegro.
1 Evans 1883; Valtrovi} 1886, 70–71; Valtrovi} 1891a,
109–130; Valtrovi} 1891b, 130–142. For initial research in the
second half of the 19th century, on Sirmium and its early Christian
monuments, among which one should especially mention the remains
of the basilica of St. Sinerota, see: Jeremi} 2004, 43–75; Jeremi}
2006, 115–131.
2 Khatchatrian 1962. Although this work was written in the
1960s, it still represents the most complete collection on baptistries,
written so far.
3 Khatchatrian 1962, XV.
224
OLIVERA ILI]
Map 1. Distribution of early Christian baptistries in northern Illyricum: 1. Bela Palanka (Remesiana); 2. Boljetin
(Smorna); 3. Babotinac, Prokuplje; 4. Cari~in Grad; 5. Gamzigrad (Felix Romuliana); 6. Gradina on Mt. Jelica;
7. Grbalj ( Podlastva Monastery); 8. Kotor; 9. Doljani near Duklja (Doclea), Podgorica; 10. Veliki Gradac (Taliata)
Karta 1. Rasprostrawenost paleohri{}anskih krstionica u Severnom Iliriku: 1. Bela Palanka
(Remesiana); 2. Boqetin (Smorna); 3. Babotinac, Prokupqe; 4. Cari~in Grad; 5. Gamzigrad (Felix Romuliana);
6. Gradina na Jelici; 7. Grbaq (Manastir Podlastva); 8. Kotor; 9. Doqani kod Dukqe (Doclea), Podgorica;
10. Veliki Gradac (Taliata)
The little that has been written about baptistries in
our own literature is mostly found within wider analysis
of certain sacral buildings. In her study on early Christian baptistries, I. Nikolajevi} collected data on the monuments registered in the former Yugoslavia.4 However, since it was impossible for her fully to document
the numerous buildings she mentioned in her work, I.
Nikolajevi} included only the designs of the baptistries
that were not in A. Khatchatrian’s opus and those designs that had been corrected in revised research
work.5 In addition to maps of their distribution, I. Nikolajevi} also compiled a table, listing the dates of the
baptistries. Therefore, even today (in the absence of new
archaeological finds and analysis), I. Nikolajevi}’s study
4
Nikolajevi} 1966, 223–256.
A. Khatchatrian documented three monuments in the territories of Serbia and Montenegro. These were the baptistries in Cari~in
Grad, ancient Duklja (Doljani). Khatchatrian mistakenly attributed
the location of the third baptistry, which was in the church in Klisura
near Ni{, to Dalmatia, subsequently defining it as a baptistry. However, in later research, \. Stri~evi} interpreted this space as a prothesis with a honephtirion. More will be said about the church in
Klisura, in the text, later on.
5
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM
can be considered the only synthetic survey of earlyChristian baptistries in Serbia and Montenegro.
As for the territory of the former Yugoslavia, one
should also mention the work of P. Chevalier,6 which
deals with the same subject as the already mentioned
works. In her exhaustive study, she collected data on
some forty baptistries in the territory of the Roman
province of Dalmatia. For us, this study was particularly useful, given the geographical proximity of the
monuments she described. As we shall see later, apart
from a number of local features that are specific, the
architectural shapes of the baptistries in the province
of Dalmatia have characteristics that are common to
the baptistries in the broader area of the Balkan
Peninsula.
Bearing in mind all the said studies on the baptisteria of Late Antiquity, we endeavoured to learn more
about this subject from the new finds of baptismal
monuments in Serbia and Montenegro, and interpret
them in the proper way. In work on the collection of documents acquired from the archaeological excavations,
or working on different data published in national and
foreign publications, we came across the same problems
the previous authors had encountered. The lack of complete data and the discrepancies in their interpretation
was evident, both in the descriptions of the monuments
themselves and in the presentation of their designs.
In compiling this paper, conceived as a catalogue
of plans with the descriptions of the early Christian
baptistries in Serbia and Montenegro, first, we had to
define the notion of a baptistry. Initially, this term referred to the piscine itself, as the place that served for
performing the baptismal ritual. In time, with the discovery of numerous baptistries in different geographical regions, it was concluded that the greater or lesser
number of additional rooms constituted an ensemble that
were used in the ceremony of baptism. There were antechambers, galleries, different annexes, etc., the function
of which was sometimes difficult to determine. Such
an example exists in Boljetin (Smorna), a military camp
on the Danubian limes, where there was an additional
chamber on the southern side of the church naos, which,
although it had a separate entrance, was also connected
to the naos of the church.7 This hall can be interpreted
as a catechumenon, given the installation for baptism
located next to the southern wall inside the naos.
Despite the previously mentioned, elementary difficulties we encountered while writing this paper, it
seems that we nevertheless succeeded in classifying the
material we collected, according to the architectonic
form, the position and the chronological framework.
STARINAR LVI/2006.
225
This made it easier for us not only to examine the specific, local features in the act of baptism itself, but also
to try to reconstruct the liturgical activities that accompanied it.
All the monuments presented in this work are in
the territories of present-day Serbia and Montenegro
(Map 1). With the administrative division of the Roman
Empire in the 4th century, this area fell within the eastern part of the Empire, that is, within the northern part
of the Illyrian prefecture (Praefectura praetorio per
Illyricum) that extended from the Danube in the north,
to Macedonia in the south, from the Drina river and the
Bay of Kotor in the west, to the River Vit in Bulgaria,
in the east.8
With the edict of the emperor Galerius (311) and,
some time later, the so-called Edict of Milan, issued by
Constantine and Licinius (313), the Christians, as an
already sizeable and influential societal force within
the Roman Empire, were granted freedom to profess
their faith. This transition from paganism to Christianity terminated with an edict in 380, during the reign
of Gracianus and Theodosius I, abolishing pagan religion in the Roman Empire and linking its fate with the
triumph of Christianity.
This crucial event, which singled out the Christian
religion as the only one that could be professed throughout the whole Empire, brought radical changes not only
to its internal administrative organisation but also in
the domain of the architectural and artistic canons for
sacral buildings. At that time, architectonic forms were
still modest but they would become more elaborate as
the political and economic importance of the church
grew. At this time, the large urban centres acquired their
first basilicas, as did the smaller towns and fortresses.
Initially, sacral buildings were erected that needed to
be equipped with installations that would be used in
the increasingly mass baptisms of catechumens in the
episcopal centres, and later in smaller urban agglomerations, as in the rural areas. The organisation of the
Church corresponded to the administrative organisation of the provinces so that the major cities also became
the episcopal seats.9
The territory of northern Illyricum came into contact with the new religion later than the southern part
6
Chevalier 1988, 111–163.
More details on the baptistry in Boljetin in the later part of
the text.
8 Ostrogorski 1959, 55–56; Ferjan~i} 1997, 231–239.
9 Popovi} R. 1995, 29.
7
226
OLIVERA ILI]
Fig. 1. Boljetin (Smorna); ground plan of church with baptistry
Sl. 1. Boqetin (Smorna); osnova crkve sa krstionicom
of the Balkans, where Christianity had already been
present since the times of the Apostles. According to
the New Testament scriptures, the first Christian communities were founded in the large cities, indicating
that the beginnings of Christianity in the said area
should be sought in the large urban centres.10 This phenomenon was characteristic for the entire Mediterranean region so that one can speak of Christianity as
»the religion of the cities«.
The rise and fall of ecclesiastical life in the Balkans
from the 4th to the beginning of the 7th century was closely bound to the changing political circumstances the
provinces of the Illyrian prefecture were exposed to.
***
In one of the better preserved castra on the Danube
limes, in the central part of the Boljetin (Smorna) locality,11 a single-nave, basilica type church building was
erected, which had a semi-circular apse on the eastern
and a narthex on the western side.12 Along the southern
wall of the naos, close to the altar area, a rectangular
annex was added, with a separate entrance from the outside but it (the annex) was also connected to the naos
(fig. 1). On the inner side of the southern wall of the
naos, opposite this annex, the remains were discovered
of a baptistry with a piscine for baptisms. The outside of
the piscine was in the shape of a cross. It was built of
brick, and covered with two layers of lime mortar.
The purpose of the annex on the southern side could
be described as a catechumenon, given the installation
for baptism positioned along the southern wall of the
naos. This would correspond fully with the liturgical
rules of that time because only baptised neophytes had
the right to attend the liturgy, standing in the naos of the
church.13 It is evident that the baptistry was used for
baptising the members of the military garrisons that
manned this fortress, and their families.
A similar example was recorded on the southern
side of a single-nave church building in the Tsébélda
locality, on the eastern shores of the Black Sea.14 In
contrast to Boljetin, where the piscine was placed in
the eastern part of the church naos, here, the baptismal
section was installed in the south-western annex located next to the room that extended along the southern
nave of the church towards the altar area, which probably functioned as a catechumenon, and both rooms were
linked to the naos of the church.
The church in Boljetin dates back to the last phase
of fortification.15 Inside it, not far from the altar, coins
of Justinus I, Justinian I, Justinus II and Mauricius were
discovered, according to which one may draw the conclusion that the camp was abandoned in the last years
of the 6th century. Many of the buildings within the
fortress, bear the marks of large-scale fire, which may
well coincide with the invasion by the Avars and the
Slavs at the end of the 6th century.
Inside another fortress on the Danubian limes,
Veliko Gradi{te, Taliata in ancient times, which lay on
10 The New Testament scriptures contain an epistles the apostle
Paul sent the Christian communities in the cities of the southern
Balkan Peninsula: one to the Philippians in Macedonia, two to the
Thessalonians, two to the Corinthians in Achaia and one to the apostle
Titus on the island of Crete. Dela ap. (Epistles), 16, 9–12; 17, 1–14;
19, 21–22; 20, 1–2.
11 Kondi} 1974, 53.
12 Zotovi} 1984, 212–225.
13 Popovi} J. 1995 (rp. edition Sremski Karlovci 1912),
430–432.
14 Khroushkova 1981, 17, fig. 2.
15 Zotovi} 1984, 224.
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM
227
Fig. 2. Veliki Gradac (Taliata); ground plan of church with baptistry
Sl. 2. Veliki Gradac (Taliata); osnova crkve sa krstionicom
the border of the province of Moesia Prima and Dacia
Ripensis during the period of Late Antiquity and the
Early Byzantine period, there was another church, the
ground plan of which was similar to the previously mentioned example, with a semi-circular altar apse facing
eastwards, the narthex to the left side and the annex
added on later along the southern wall of the naos, close
to the apse section, with an opening for the entrance on
its western wall (fig. 2).16 There was no communicating
link between the naos and the annex, so we can suppose that this area did not serve as a catechumenon, as it
did in the previously mentioned example.
The building was erected beside one of the towers,
which in the previous period flanked the western gate.
The area of the former gate was walled up in the 6th
century, and the tower marked in the literature as tower
10 was transformed into a baptistry. The baptismal
piscine was placed in the southern section of the tower.
It was made of bricks joined with mortar. The piscine
was of an irregular circular shape, it was built-in and
sunken in the space. One descended into it by means of
steps on the western and emerged by another set of
steps on the eastern side, after the baptismal ceremony
was completed. At its corners were four columns,
probably supports for a baldachin.17 The find of a follis
of Justinus I (518–527) between the flooring of the naos
of the church (where two stages of construction were
evidenced) confirm the early Byzantine attribution of
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this church. To all intents and purposes, the fortress, as
in the previously mentioned case, was definitively abandoned at the end of the 6th century.
In the Gradina fortress on Mt. Jelica, near ^a~ak,
among the basilicas from the Justinian epoch, particularly worth noting is the basilica with a baptistry, known
in the literature as Basilica »C«.18 In the north-western
annex of the church, which had the function of a baptistry, there was a piscine, the walls of which were built
in a cruciform shape, giving the impression that its
bottom was raised from the floor (fig. 3).
The walls of the baptistry were decorated with
fragmentarily preserved frescoes in the lower zones
(fig. 4). Judging by the fragments of the fresco decoration, the ornaments were an imitation of marble slabs
in a reddish-brown colour, yellow and blue.19 The size
of the piscine itself suggests that the ritual of baptising
adults could have been performed only by their partial
immersion in the water and by pouring additional
16
Popovi} V. 1984, 265–282.
Popovi} V. 1984, 276.
18 Milinkovi} 1995, 49–60; Milinkovi} 2002, 71–133.
19 In the opinion of the researcher, the edge of the band along
the southern and western wall of the baptistry indicates that green and
dark bule prevailed in the painting of the central field. Milinkovi}
1995, 54, T. IIb, T. V; Milinkovi} 2002, 99, Abb. 26.
17
228
OLIVERA ILI]
Fig. 3. Gradina na Jelici; ground plan of church »C« with baptistry
(according to: M. Milinkovi}, Starinar LI, 2002, Abb. 22)
Sl. 3. Gradina na Jelici; osnova crkve »C« sa krstionicom
(prema: M. Milinkovi}, Starinar LI, 2002, Abb. 22)
Fig. 4. Gradina on Mt. Jelica; frescoes from the baptistry of church »C«
(according to: M. Milinkovi}, Starinar LI, 2002, Abb. 26)
Sl. 4. Gradina na Jelici; freske iz krstionice crkve »C«
(prema: M. Milinkovi}, Starinar LI, 2002, Abb. 26)
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM
229
Fig. 5. Gamzigrad (Romuliana); ground plan of baptistry in the ensemble of Basilica II
(according to: M. ^anak-Medi}, Gamzigrad kasnoanti~ka palata arhitektura i prostorni sklop 1978, sl. 123)
Sl. 5. Gamzigrad (Romuliana); osnova krstionice u sklopu bazilike II
(prema: M. ^anak-Medi}, Gamzigrad kasnoanti~ka palata arhitektura i prostorni sklop 1978, sl. 123)
water over them (aspersion). The baptistry was connected by a doorway to the naos of the church. The
church and the entire complex of sacral and profane
buildings within the fortress in the Gradina locality on
Mt. Jelica, belonged to the Justinian period. This certainly involves a fortified and significant ecclesiastical
centre on the borders of the province of Moesia Prima
and Dalmatia.
A church in Gamzigrad (Felix Romuliana), designated in literature as Basilica II (which was partly researched), has a room with a semi-circular apse facing
east, which contains a piscine that, according to M. ^anak-Medi}, may have served as a baptistry (fig. 5).20
The walls of this space were built from brick joined
with a mortar, made of mud. The difference in height
at the entrance, which was on the eastern side, was
resolved by means of marble steps positioned beside
the apse. The piscine, of a cruciform shape was encompassed by a wall made from bricks and lime mortar.
The central part of the piscine had a rectangular base,
lined with marble slabs, the dimensions of which were
56 x 52 cm. The preserved part of the bottom of the
piscine was at a depth of 74 cm. The opening in the
bottom of the piscine was connected to a drain. According to the level of the steps leading into the baptistry,
M. ^anak-Medi} assumed that the upper level of the
piscine (that is its edge or frame) was elevated several
dozen centimetres above the floor.21 Given the small
dimensions of the piscine, it may have served for baptising children, although one should not exclude the
likelihood of it having been used for adults as well.
However, in that case, the baptisms would have been
STARINAR LVI/2006.
possible only by means of partial immersion in the
water, with additional aspersion.
In the north-western quarter of the Gamzigrad
complex, another baptistry was discovered (fig. 6). It
was a structure with a quadrifoliate base, constructed
as part of a large, triple-nave basilica in the 6th century,
and is designated in the literature as Basilica III.22
In an early Byzantine fortress in the Veliko kale locality in Babotinac near Prokuplje, the remains were discovered of a single-nave church. It had a semi-circular
apse, facing the east, and a narthex on the western side
(fig. 7).23 In the south-eastern corner of the nave, a
plateau was created in the shape of an irregular square,
elevated 0.44 m above the floor of the church. In the
central part was a circular piscine (fig. 8 a–b). The bottom
of the piscine was at the level of the floor of the church.
On it was a small, circular aperture that was, most
probably, the beginning of a drainpipe. The coating on
the walls of the piscine consisted of two layers of lime
mortar. The thickness of the final layer was 1–2 cm.
In the southern pastophoria of the church, which
was interpreted to be the diakonikon, in its apsidal section, was a pool, which, to all appearances served as a
20
^anak-Medi} 1978, 134.
^anak-Medi} 1978, 135.
22 ^anak-Medi} 1978, 138.
23 Kuzmanovi}-Cvetkovi} 1986, 213–218. I would like to
take this opportunity to express my gratitude to Julka Kuzmanovi}Cvetkovi}, curator of the Toplica Museum in Prokuplje, for the
technical documentation she supplied.
21
230
OLIVERA ILI]
Fig. 6. Gamzigrad (Romuliana); ground plan of Basilica III with baptistry
(according to: M. ^anak-Medi}, Gamzigrad kasnoanti~ka palata arhitektura i prostorni sklop 1978, sl. 124)
Sl. 6. Gamzigrad (Romuliana); osnova bazilike III sa krstionicom
(prema: M. ^anak-Medi}, Gamzigrad kasnoanti~ka palata arhitektura i prostorni sklop 1978, sl. 124)
honephtirion.24 The manner of building this basilica
with the pastophoria on the western side indicates the
period up to the first half of the 6th century. Later,
changes in the liturgy would lead to changes in the
plan of the churches so that the diakonikon and the
prothesis would be positioned next to the altar space.25
Unfortunately, ancient Remesiana, which lies in
the more central city area of Bela Palanka, has not been
sufficiently investigated and the excavations, commenced back in the 1950s, do not offer enough data to
enable us to examine ecclesiastical activities in this
important episcopal centre in Dacia Mediterranea.26
The remains of the triple-nave basilica erected west of
the Roman fort are evidence of the existence of the episcopal centre and a developed ecclesiastical life in Remesiana. In the southern annex of the basilica’s narthex,
there was a cruciform piscine. According to the research
results so far, the basilica belonged to the early Byzantine period of building, in other words, to the 6th century.27
Proof of the importance of the episcopal centre in
Remesiana lies in the fact that the great church poet
and missionary, Nikita, Remesianensis, resided and
worked here in the 4th and the beginning of the 5th
century. He is believed to have lived from the year 366
to 414.28 His contemporary and friend, Paulinus of
Nola provides reliable testimony about his life and
work.29 The assumption of I. Nikolajevi} that the frag-
ment of an inscription found in 1885, mentioning the
church of SS. Peter and Paul, and today unfortunately
lost, could be linked to the remains of the basilica with
the baptistry seems justified to us.30
The baptistry in Cari~in Grad (most probably Iustiniana Prima) occupies a central place among the so far
discovered baptistries in the region of northern Illyricum.
It was discovered in excavations that were carried out
before the II World War, in 1937.31 Later in the period
24
Kuzmanovi}-Cvetkovi} 1986, 216.
Stri~evi} 1959, 59.
26 Mano-Zisi, Popovi} Q. 1959, 381–382; Nikolajevi}
1966, 232; Gu{i} 1987, 21–35.
27 Gu{i} 1987, 34. Unfortunately, the published results of
hitherto research, without the appropriate plans, do not offer enough
data about the church itself or its significance, nor about its baptistry.
All my attempts to come by the original plans of this church and its
baptistry were fruitless.
28 Zeiller 1967 (rp. edition Paris 1918), 549–558.
29 He was a great evangeliser of the barbarian tribes, primarily
the Skythians, the Goths, the Dacians and the Huns, as well as the
Besa tribe that inhabited the regions of the Rhodope and the Srednje
Gore mountains in Bulgaria, who were known for their stubbornness,
see: Popovi} R. 1995, 82; Sveti Nikita Remezijanski 2007;
Popovi} R. 2007, 131–147.
30 Nikolajevi} 1966, 232; Petrovi} 1979, 106.
31 Petkovi} 1939, 141–152, sl. 2; Petkovi} 1948, 40–48, fig. 2.
25
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM
231
Fig. 7. Babotinac, Prokuplje; ground plan of church with baptistry
Sl. 7. Babotinac, Prokupqe; osnova crkve sa krstionicom
Fig. 8. Babotinac, Prokuplje: a) piscine, view from the north; b) piscine
Sl. 8. Babotinac, Prokupqe: a) piscina, pogled sa severa; b) piscina
from 1977–1982, revisory excavations were conducted
over the entire acropolis.32 The baptistry was built along
the southern wall of the episcopal basilica but was not
»organically« connected to it. The connecting element of
the church and the baptistry was only the portico, erected
along the western façade of the baptistry. It also had
the role of a passageway from the eastern side of the
acropolis, securing the approach to the building (erected west of the baptistry), known in the literature as the
consignatorium although its true function has not been
reliably ascertained.33
The baptistry is a building on a roughly square
ground plan with slightly reduced dimensions in its
south-eastern compartment, which resulted from fitting
in the entire building into an area that was already »wedged in« by the ramparts of the fort around the acropolis
(fig. 9). The ground plans of the remaining three corner
compartments were square-shaped. The central inner
STARINAR LVI/2006.
space of the baptistry consisted of four conches shaped
like horseshoes, with vaults in the upper zone. Thus, the
cruciform disposition of the conches created a space
with a square ground plan in the central section of the
building, in the corners of which there were four massive columns on square pedestals, supporting the dome
of the baptistry by means of arches and a drum. In the
very centre of the space was a cruciform piscine, made
up of the receptacle and four symmetrically distributed
flights of steps. The baptistry was richly decorated,
which is illustrated by the finds of luxuriant composite
capitals, marble slabs, mosaics of glass paste, as well
32 This refers to Yugoslav–French archaeological research, when
other facilities in Cari~in Grad were examined inside and beyond the
city ramparts, in addition to the acropolis. Duval 1984, 399–481.
33 Kondi}, Popovi} V. 1977, 37.
232
OLIVERA ILI]
Fig. 9. Cari~in Grad; ground plan of baptistry in the general plan of the Episcopal Basilica
(according to: N. Duval, L’Architecture religieuse de Tsaritchin Grad dans le cadre de l’Illyricum oriental au VIe siècle,
Villes et peuplement dans l’Illyricum protobyzantin 1984, fig. 3; drawing M. Jeremi})
Sl. 9. Cari~in Grad; osnova krstionice u sklopu Episkopske bazilike
(prema: N. Duval, L’Architecture religieuse de Tsaritchin Grad dans le cadre de l’Illyricum oriental au VIe siècle,
Villes et peuplement dans l’Illyricum protobyzantin1984, fig. 3; crte` M. Jeremi})
as fragments of frescoes (fig. 10).34 The floors in the
conches were covered with mosaics. In the northern and
southern conches were geometrical ornaments and, in
addition to geometrical motives in the eastern and
western conches, there were plant and zoomorphic presentations. Among them, we find images of an octopus, a deer, a rabbit, a foal, a ram and a butterfly. The
corner, square areas were paved with square bricks.
According to data from an earlier period (1937), the
piscine was sunken and shallow. Its bottom was paved
with bricks, while there were marks that could still be
seen, from the layer of marble slabs on the walls.35 Considering that no supply pipes or drainpipes were found
during excavations, the earlier research workers believed the baptistry was a mausoleum or a martyrium.36
Some time later though, V. Petkovi} attributed a baptismal function to this building.37
The data from the excavations conducted in the
period from 1977–1982 brought new data to light,
based on which one can more accurately explain the
way in which the piscine was constructed and how it
functioned.38 In short, the piscine had two construction
phases. It was built of bricks, and all the visible surfaces
of the walls were coated in a layer of white marble. In
the southern conch, there were traces of a supply pipe,
as well as a drainpipe, directed towards a crudely built
shaft not far from the southern wall of the baptistery. 39
The overall depth of the piscine starting from the level
of the first, upper step was 77 cm.40 The second phase
34 The lower parts of the walls were coated in marble slabs,
while their upper parts were decorated with frescoes and mosaics,
Kondi}, Popovi} V. 1977, 35, sl. 17.
35 Petkovi} 1939,
36 Mesesnel 1938, 189, sl. 11; Grabar 1948, 54.
37 Petkovi} 1950, 346.
38 Duval 1984, 414–416.
39 Duval 1984, 414, fig. 11.
40 I obtained the data on the dimensions of the piscine from
Dr. M. Jeremi}, who, as a member of the Yugoslav–French team, took
part in the excavations of the acropolis (1977–1982), with the technical filmings and an analysis of the discovered architecture. The complete analysis of the architecture of the acropolis has been prepared
for printing and will be published in the volume, Cari~in Grad III.
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM
233
Fig. 10. Cari~in Grad; ground plan of baptistry, reconstruction
(according to: N. Duval, L’Architecture religieuse de Tsaritchin Grad dans le cadre de l’Illyricum oriental au VIe siècle,
Villes et peuplement dans l’Illyricum protobyzantin 1984, fig. 10; drawing ^. Vasi})
Sl. 10. Cari~in Grad; osnova krstionice, rekonstrukcija
(prema: N. Duval, L’Architecture religieuse de Tsaritchin Grad dans le cadre de l’Illyricum oriental au VIe siècle,
Villes et peuplement dans l’Illyricum protobyzantin1984, fig. 10; crte` ^. Vasi})
was marked by repairs, when the supply of the piscine
and the drainage of the water from the said receptacle
no longer functioned. A new floor of bricks in lime mortar was now elevated to the level that corresponded to
half of the former depth of the piscine.41
The episcopal church, the baptistry, and then the
building erected west of it, interpreted as a consignatorium, as well as the building complex along the northern
side of the street of the acropolis, designated as the episcopal palace, constituted a single, fortified architectural
ensemble, isolated from the rest of this specific urban
agglomeration.42 The whole of this complex, as well as
the fortress of Cari~in Grad itself, belong to the Justinian epoch, in other words, the 6th century.
Today, the assumption mainly accepted in professional circles is the identification of Cari~in Grad with
Iustiniana Prima.43 This city was founded in the first
decade of Justinian’s rule, when numerous fortresses
were either renovated or completely new ones were constructed on their foundations across the broader territory of northern Illyricum. According to a description
STARINAR LVI/2006.
by Procopius (De aedif., IV, 1),44 the city was founded
by Justinian I in the vicinity of his native town, Taurisium, in a desire to link the civil and ecclesiastical centres of Illyricum with his native land and to memorialise his birthplace. With his Novela XI from the year 535,
the newly established ecclesiastical region was not
within the canonic jurisdiction of the older Church
centres but had the nature of a completely autonomous
and independent church organisation.45 The jurisdiction of the new archbishopric covered five provinces
of the diocese of Dacia, that is, the northern part of the
41
Duval 1984, 414.
Vasi} 1987, 127–138.
43 On the problem of the whereabouts of Iustiniana Prima, the
most complete presentation was given by: Bari{i} 1963, 127–140;
see: V. Popovi}, 1990, 53–108.
44 De aedif. IV, 1 p. 104.20–107.2; translation according to:
Bari{i} 1955.
45 R. Popovi} 1995, 71, n. 29.
42
234
OLIVERA ILI]
Fig. 11. Doljani near Duklja, ground plan of church with baptistry (according to: V. Kora}, Starinar IX–X, 1959, sl. 1)
Sl. 11. Doqani kod Dukqe, osnova crkve sa krstionicom (prema V. Kora}, Starinar IX–X, 1959, sl. 1)
prefecture Illyricum: Dacia Mediterranea, Dacia Ripensis, Moesia Prima, Dardania, and Praevalis, and the
northern part of the diocese of Macedonia with the province of Macedonia Secunda and, finally, part of the province of Pannonia Secunda with the city of Basiana.
The many years of internal strife in Byzantium,
following the death of the emperor Mauricius, during
the reign of the emperor Phokas (602–610) led to
general upheaval in the northern regions of the Balkan
Peninsula, which also had its effect on the church organisation in the diocese of Dacia. From the surviving
sources, one can follow the history of the archbishopric
of Iustiniana Prima until the beginning of the 7th century. At the end of the 6th and the beginning of the 7th
century, the episcopal cathedra in Iustiniana Prima was
occupied by Archbishop John. His name was recorded in
documents thanks to the correspondence he maintained
with Pope Gregory I (590–604). The last letter of Pope
Gregory dates from the year 602.46 This, at the same
time, is the last mention of Iustiniana Prima in official
documents. It appears that no doubt under the influence
of the Avar and Slav invasions, the diocese lost its earlier
political importance even before the fall of Byzantine
power in the northern part of the prefecture of Illyricum.
Thus, in the time of Mauricius (582–602), the administrative centre moved from Iustiniana Prima farther
south to Thessalonica, where the highest-ranking representative of civil authority, the Praefectus praetorio
per Illyricum, resided.47
In the region of the province of Praevalis, the former
territories of which corresponded more or less to the
present-day region of Montenegro, three baptismal structures have so far been registered. Although the remains
of baptismal installations have not been recorded in the
episcopal centre of Duklja (Doclea), a baptistry was discovered in its immediate neighbourhood, in a triconch
in Doljani near Duklja. This baptistry, with an apse on
the northern side was located in the northern part of the
three-part narthex, while in the central section a cruciform piscine was installed, sunken into the floor (fig.
11).48 Catechumens descended into it by steps positioned
on the eastern and western sides of the piscine (fig. 12).
46
Grani} 1926, 132.
Grani} 1926, 133, n. 66.
48 Kora} 1959, 383–385. sl. 1; Kova~evi} 1967, 271, sl. 22;
Mijovi} 1978, 673, sl. 25.
47
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM
235
Fig. 13. Kotor, ground plan of early Christian basilica with baptistry beneath the present-day
Church of the Blessed Virgin of Rijeka
(according to: M. ^anak-Medi}, Arhitektura Nemawinog doba II crkve u Polimqu i na Primorju,
Beograd 1989, 209, sl. 4)
Sl. 13. Kotor, osnova ranohri{}anske bazilike sa krstionicom
ispod dana{we crkve sv. Marije od rijeke
(prema M. ^anak-Medi}, Arhitektura Nemawinog doba II crkve u Polimqu i na Primorju,
Beograd 1989, 209, sl. 4)
Fig. 12. Doljani near Duklja (Doclea), baptistry with piscine, view from the south
(according to: N. Bogosavqevi}, Manastir Zlatica, Doqani kod Podgorice 2001, sl. 14)
Fig. 14. Kotor, piscine of early Christian basilica beneath the floor of the sacristi of the present-day Church of the
Blessed Virgin of Rijeka (according to: J. Martinovi}, Prilozi povijesti umjetnosti u Dalmaciji 29, 1990, sl. 25)
Sl. 12. Doqani kod Dukqe (Doclea), krstionica sa piscinom, pogled sa juga
(prema: N. Bogosavqevi}, Manastir Zlatica, Doqani kod Podgorice 2001, sl. 14)
Sl. 14. Kotor, piscina ranohri{}anske bazilike ispod poda sakristije dana{we crkve sv. Marije od Rijeke
(prema: J. Martinovi}, Prilozi povijesti umjetnosti u Dalmaciji 29, Split 1990, sl. 25)
STARINAR LVI/2006.
236
OLIVERA ILI]
Fig. 15. Podlastva Monastery, Grbalj; remains of a early Christian piscine beside the present-day
Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin (according to: Markovi}, Grbaq kroz vekove, 55–68, sl. 2)
Sl. 15. Manastir Podlastva, Grbaq; ostaci paleohri{}anske piscine pored dana{we crkve
posve}ene Ro|ewu Bogorodice (prema: Markovi}, Grbaq kroz vekove, 55–68, sl. 2)
The dimensions of the baptistry indicate that it could
have been used to baptise adults, i.e. that baptism was
performed with catechumens by immersion. Therefore,
the conclusion can be drawn that the church was active in
the time of the mass baptisms of adults and the conversion to Christianity of a large number of the autochthonous
population of the province of Praevalis. The preserved
remains of the decorative sculpture, the method of construction and the existence of the piscine for baptising
adults, classify this church in the Justinian epoch.49
Beneath the Romanic church of the Blessed Virgin
in Kotor, known as the Church of the Blessed Virgin of
Rijeka, or Colleggiata,50 the remains were discovered
of an early Christian triple-nave basilica. In its northern nave, or more precisely, in its eastern apsidal section, in the area of the present-day sacristi, the remains
were found of a piscine. On the outside, it was cruciform, whereas the receptacle had a square ground plan
(fig. 13). Its inner surface was made up of the sides of
four stone blocks of roughly equal size, arranged in the
shape of a cross, while at the bottom was a stone slab
with a hole in the middle for draining off the water (fig.
14). The piscine was installed in the floor of the nave to
a depth of 2 m. The dimensions of the piscine suggest
that the baptism of adults in it could be performed only
by partly immersing them in the water, with additional
aspersion. The large triple-nave basilica along with the
baptistry, research workers believe, can be chronologi-
cally attributed to the 6th century, bearing in mind all
the recorded architectural features of this sacral building, beneath the earlier Romanic church of the Blessed
Virgin of Rijeka, which was actually the first phase in
the genesis of this significant shrine in old Kotor.51
In the region of Grbalj, the remains of a piscine
were discovered in the space between the southern wall
of the church dedicated to the Nativity of the Blessed
Virgin and the convent of the Podlastva monastery.52
The room that housed the piscine was slightly raised in
comparison to the other sections of the basilica, and
paved with square bricks, and it is still not possible to
exactly locate the position of the piscine in relation to
49
Kora} 1959, 385.
This church has retained the status of a concathedral church
to the present day. The bishop of Kotor also bore the title of abbot
of the Church of the Blessed Virgin. A tombstone with a relief engraving of the image of the bishop, which was kept in the Kotor
Lapidarium, and originated from an earlier period, indicates that the
bishops of Kotor were once buried here. The epithet Collegiata originates from the collegiate of canons, which belonged both to this
church and to the cathedral of St. Trifun, see Martinovi} 1992, 173.
51 The church and therefore the baptisterium were more closely dated to the early Christian period, in the archaeological research
done during the mid-eighties. Martinovi} 1984, 23–44; Martinovi}
1986, 17–73; Martinovi} 1990, 21–31; Martinovi} 1992, 172;
^anak-Medi} 1989, 203–251.
52 Markovi} 2005, 55–68.
50
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM
the basilica. The piscine was cruciform with four conches that created a regular quadrifoliate shape (fig. 15).
It was made of hewn stone and square bricks joined
together with lime mortar. The inside of the piscine
was coated in a thick layer of lime mortar. Like the
majority of baptistries in our country, there are no installations for supplying or draining off water, which
indicates that emptying the piscine was done manually.
Bearing in mind the size and the depth of the piscine itself, we may assume that it served for baptising adults,
most probably by immersion with additional aspersion,
as in the case of the previously mentioned church in Kotor. The early Christian basilica on the site of the present-day Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin in the
Podlastva monastery is dated to the 6th century, judging
by the preserved architectural decorative plastics.53
FINAL CONSIDERATIONS
This survey of the distribution of early Christian
baptistries in Serbia and Montenegro, has enabled us
to classify them according to their typological features
and chronological frame. At the same time it enabled
us to divide the said buildings into two basic groups:
– Baptistries that represented an autonomous, centrally built space, in which a piscine was installed. Such
solutions were most often linked to the episcopal church
intended for baptising adult catechumens, and which
was originally performed by means of immersion, which
required a pool of larger dimensions. Where the territories of Serbia and Montenegro were concerned, this
type of case was registered only in Cari~in Grad. Here,
as we said, the baptistry was located right next to the
episcopal basilica but there was no »organic« architectural link to the basilica itself (the baptistry was 3.5 m
away from the southern diaconikon of the church, which
was located beside the apse on the eastern side). These
centrally planned buildings were erected throughout
the Mediterranean region, most often within episcopal
complexes, and their ground plans had the most diverse
shapes: rectangular, square, triconchal, tetrachonchal,
hexagonal or circular.54
– The second group consisted of baptistries that
were mostly incorporated into the space of the church
building itself. Although very few baptistries of this kind
have been found in Serbia and Montenegro so far, we
can nevertheless distinguish two basic types in relation
to their position in the space of the church building.
The baptistries could be directly connected to the
narthex of the church. They were mostly attached to
STARINAR LVI/2006.
237
one of the compartments of the narthex. We encounter
such an example in the triple-nave basilica erected west
of the Roman castrum in Bela Palanka (Remesiana). In
Doljani, near the old town of Duklje (Doclea), for instance, the baptistry was located in the southern part of
the narthex but, generally speaking, they could also be
installed in its northern section.
Baptismal installations positioned in the naos of the
church itself, in most cases in the eastern section near
the altar, was one of the regional characteristics. This
feature was recorded in the churches in fortresses dating
from Late Antiquity, in Boljetin (Smorna) or Babotinac
near Prokuplje.
A baptistry that deserved particular attention was
the one with a quadrifoliate shape, positioned along
the southern nave of the big triconchal Basilica III in
Gamzigrad (Romuliana). It was similar in form to the
tetraconchal baptistry of the Northern Basilica in Stobi,
located on the northern side of the church, and was dated
to the second half of the 5th century.55 The remains of
the piscine have not been discovered so that at present,
one can only assume that it may have had a cruciform
shape, analogous to the example from Stobi.56
One should also mention the question of the pastophoria with smaller apsidal endings on the eastern
side found in Kur{umlija57(fig. 16a), Klisura near Ni{58
(fig. 16b), Cari~in Grad (fig. 16c)59, and in Babotinac
near Prokuplje (fig. 7).60 The remains of small, cruciform, shallow piscines that were installed in semi-circular niches and equipped with plumbing, persuaded
D. Stri~evi} to initially interpret them as a place that
served for baptising children. In the course of later excavations, however, the same author changed his mind,
and thought that these piscines were not for baptisms
but were used as a honephtirion (cwneut»rion), since
53
Markovi} 2005, 60–61.
Khatchatrian 1962, fig. 18, 23, 50–52, 107–110, 173–179,
237–246, 316, 53, 111–113, 189–191, 317–355.
55 Vajzman 1973, 26–28, sl. 1; Lil~i} 2002, 853.
56 It is assumed that this basilica was never completed. ^anak-Medi} 1978, 138.
57 Stri~evi} 1953, 179–198, sl. 1A.
58 Stri~evi} 1953, 179–198, sl. 1C; Stri~evi} 1959, 63.
59 Mano-Zisi 1953, 154, sl. 45; Kondi}, Popovi} V. 1977,
135–139, sl. 97.
60 Kuzmanovi}-Cvetkovi} 1986, 216. Although we have no
data about whether the pool discovered in the southern annex was
equipped with plumbing, the mentioned analogies suggest that this
is a honephtirion, that is a place for washing church vessels, used
during the liturgy.
54
238
OLIVERA ILI]
their small dimensions and the place where they were located made them unsuitable for performing baptisms.61
It is obvious that this question will have to remain open
until new, revisory excavations are conducted at the
said localities.
In our descriptions of the piscines, we can say without doubt that the majority of them were of cruciform
shape. At present, depending on the shape of their inner
opening, we are able to distinguish three types:
– where the upper opening of the pool is shaped
like a cross, as in the case of the baptistry in the church
in Boljetin;
– where the shape of the upper opening is square,
as recorded in Gamzigrad in Basilica II, or in the
basilica, lying beneath the Church of the Blessed Virgin in Kotor;
– where the shape of the inner opening is cruciform, with four conches that form a quadrifoliate, as in
the case of the early Christian basilica that existed on
the site of the present-day church that belongs to the
Podlastva monastery in Montenegro. This kind of shape
is rather rare in the region of the Balkan Peninsula.
Typologically analogous examples were discovered in
the province of Dalmatia in the localities of Lepenica,
Klobuk and Dabravina.62 The origin of this type of piscine should be sought in the East and chronologically,
they can be attributed to the 6th century.63
Besides those with a cruciform shape, there are also
piscines that are circular, such as those in Veliki Gradac
and Babotinac near Prokuplje.
Access to the piscines was most often resolved by
constructing steps. By installing two small flights of
steps, one enabling the person to enter the piscine and
the other, to get out of it after the ritual ended, is connected to the ritual of baptism and in keeping with
Christian symbolism, given that the neophyte did not
return by the way he or she had entered but took a new
route. The step structures were preserved in Veliki
Gradac, in Basilica II in Gamzigrad, in Cari~in Grad,
and in Doljani near Duklja.
Very often, the baptistries had the proper installations for the supply and drainage of water. Their remains
were recorded in Basilica II in Gamzigrad, in Cari~in
Grad, in Babotinac near Prokuplje, and in the early
Christian basilica beneath the Church of the Blessed
Virgin in Kotor.
The dimensions of the piscines could differ considerably, indicating the existence of the different baptismal rites that were practised in the initial stage of the
development of Christianity. The differences in the
dimensions testify that two different rituals were used
in baptism in the period from the 4th to the end of the
6th century. This kind of situation was also recorded in
our regions, as well.
The initial rite of baptism by immersion was most
probably used in baptistries where the piscines were of
larger dimensions. This case was recorded in Cari~in
Grad, in Doljani near Duklja and in the baptistry discovered in the Podlastva monastery complex in Grbalj.
If the pools with water were shallower, then people resorted to additional aspersion. As time went on, parallel
to the ritual involving total immersion, a new kind of
partial immersion in the water was practised, with additional aspersion. The practice of baptising a person in
two ways began in the 5th century. In our country, the
earliest example of baptism with additional aspersion,
bearing in mind the size of the piscine, was most probably applied in Gamzigrad, in Basilica II, which is
chronologically dated to the 5th century.64 In the opinion
of M. ^anak-Medi}, the piscine, with its dimensions,
could have been used for the baptism of children but if
adults were also baptised here only the ritual with additional aspersion can have been used.65 This twofold way
of baptising was practised in the majority of baptistries
registered in our country. Most of them date from the
6th century.
This was not an isolated case in the Balkan Peninsula. Baptism by immersion with additional aspersion
was recorded in a considerable number of churches in
Roman province Dalmatia (in Dabrovina, Vinjane,
Mogorjelo, the initial hexagonal piscine of Salona, in
Bare and perhaps in Gradac, Klobuk, Nereze, Pala~a and
Dubrovnik, as well).66 According to P. Chevalier, this
twofold manner of baptising was used in cases when
the depth of the piscine was between 70 cm and 90 cm,
where it was impossible for neophytes to be completely
immersed in the water and so one had to resort to additional aspersion.67 In time, as the process of conversion
came to an end, the need to baptise adults declined and
so in most of the baptistries, the piscine became smaller.
Based on the results of hitherto research in the regions of Serbia and Montenegro, it is still impossible to
fully examine how the process of reducing the size of
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
Stri~evi} 1959, 63.
Chevalier 1988, 133, fig. 14.
Duval, Lézine 1959, 138, 146.
^anak-Medi} 1978, 136.
^anak-Medi} 1978, 135.
Chevalier 1988, 144.
Chevalier 1988, 144.
239
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM
a
b
c
Fig. 16. Ground plan of church: a) near Kur{umlija (according to: \. Stri~evi}, ZRVI 2, 1953, 181, sl. 1A);
b) in Klisura near Ni{ (according to: \. Stri~evi}, ZRVI 2, 1953, 181, sl. 1C);
c) ground plan of triconchal church outside a rampart in Cari~in Grad
(according to: V. Kondi}, V. Popovi}, Cari~in Grad, Beograd 1977, sl. 97)
Sl. 16. Osnova crkve: a) kod Kur{umlije (prema: \. Stri~evi}, ZRVI 2, 1953, 181, sl. 1A);
b) u Klisuri kod Ni{a (prema: \. Stri~evi}, ZRVI 2, 1953, 181, sl. 1C);
c) osnova trikonhalne crkve van bedema u Cari~inom Gradu
(prema: V. Kondi}, V. Popovi}, Cari~in Grad, Beograd 1977, sl. 97)
the piscine came about, which could point to the completion of the process of Christianisation in these regions.
That it was still under way in the 6th century and that
mass baptisms of adult catechumens were still taking
place, can be seen in the examples of the piscines of
the baptistries in Cari~in Grad, in Doljani near Duklja
or the piscines in the Podlastva monastery complex in
Grbalj, the dimensions of which indicate that adults
were baptised in them. When referring to Serbia and
Montenegro, at present Cari~in Grad68 is the sole
example where the dimensions of the piscine were
reduced. In our immediate neighbourhood, we can also
mention the complete transformation of the baptistry
in the episcopal centre in Salona in the 6th century,69 or
the reduction of the entrance (steps) and the reduction
STARINAR LVI/2006.
of the dimensions of the piscines documented in numerous localities in the province of Dalmatia: on the
island of Otok in the last phase,70 Lepenica 2,71 in
Srim,72 and in Bare.73 These changes were recorded
68
The archaeological excavations in the acropolis of Cari~in
Grad (1977-1981) showed the level of the bottom of the piscine was
at one time raised to roughly half of its initial depth. Duval 1984,
415–416.
69 Chevalier 1988, 150, fig. 21, 22.
70 Chevalier 1988, 150, fig. 20.
71 Chevalier 1988, 150.
72 Chevalier 1988, 150.
73 Chevalier 1988, 150, fig. 23.
240
OLIVERA ILI]
directly prior to the penetration of the Avar and the Slav
tribes deeper into the interior of the Balkan Peninsula,
when the relatively slow process of Christianising the
Romanised autochthonous population was almost at an
end and when the need for converting adults became
rarer. We may assume that these examples also existed
in the territories of Serbia and Montenegro but this will
only be established after future research.
In most cases, baptistries in Serbia and Montenegro
are characteristically simple in architectural structure,
with modest decorative repertoire inside or none at all,
in some cases. A rare example of mosaic floors and
architecturally decorative plastics was documented only
in Cari~in Grad. Likewise, the number of baptistries
that belonged to the episcopal centres was small (Cari~in Grad, Bela Palanka, Doljani near Duklje). The presence of baptristries in churches of the so-called rural
type, like those on the Danubian limes or in Babotinac
near Prokuplje, point to the existence of a large number
of catechumens, which led to episcopal duties being
transferred to other priests.74 This phenomenon was
particularly noticeable in the 6th century, which was in
keeping with the aspiration of Justinian I to finish the
process of Christianising the non-urbanised areas in
the Balkan Peninsula.75
When we speak about the areas in the immediate
neighbourhood of Serbia and Montenegro, it is noticeable that in the territory of Macedonia, baptistries were
most often connected to large urban agglomerations.76
Meanwhile, in the province of Dalmatia, a considerable
number of baptistries also appeared in smaller, less urbanised places.77 Like the Dalmatian baptistries, ours too
were simple in structure, where the practical requirements of the ritual had primary importance and the achievements in terms of architecture and the decoration of
the interiors did not express any particular inventiveness.
***
In the data that we managed to collect and present in
this work there are still some puzzles and questions
that we are unable answer in full, regarding the constructional and decorative solutions in the facilities we
investigated, as well as the link between those elements
and liturgical requirements. We may assume that the
baptistry came into being as soon as a piscine of circular, square or cruciform shape was created within a particular room. However, we still cannot say with any
assurance how the process of Christianisation unfolded
in the Central Balkans, between the 4th to the beginning of the 7th century. After the period of intense construction of baptistries, not only in large urban centres
but also in smaller settlements and fortified castra on
the Danubian limes, were the dimensions of the baptismal piscines reduced or did they even fall out of use,
as recorded for instance in the province of Dalmatia?
Whether the ritual of baptism by immersion was gradually replaced with a ritual of aspersion, because there
was less need for the baptism of adults, still remains in
the domain of supposition. Did the presence of baptistries in churches of the so-called rural type and the
transfer of episcopal duties to other priests indicate the
existence of a large number of catechumens from the
Roman pagus? To these one might also add the matter
of dating certain churches, which also makes it difficult
to pinpoint the time of the construction of the baptistries
and the liturgical rituals that accompanied the original
process of converting the autochthonous Romanised
population in the Central Balkans, from the 4th to the
beginning of the 7th century when this long process of
Christianisation was interrupted by the invasion of the
barbarian tribes from the north (the Avars and the Slavs)
precisely when it was in its final phase.
74
Lemerle 1945, 335; Stommel 1959, 5–14; Mirkovi} 1965,
60.
75
Popovi} R. 1995, 232–234.
The most important baptistries were erected in the episcopal centres: in Stobi, Herakleia, Lichnida, Skupi, Bargali, Konjuh,
etc. Of the abundant literature dealing with the question of these
baptistries, we mention the most recent titles: Aleksova 1989; Mikul~i} 1999; Lil~i} 2002.
77 Chevalier 1988.
76
EARLY CHRISTIAN BAPTISTRIES IN NORTHERN ILLYRICUM
241
ABBREVIATIONS:
AP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
AV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Glasnik SAD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Godi{njak PMK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
VAHD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ZRVI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ZRNM^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Arheolo{ki pregled, Beograd.
Arheolo{ki vestnik, Ljubljana.
Glasnik Srpskog Arheolo{kog dru{tva, Beograd.
Godi{njak Pomorskog Muzeja u Kotoru, Kotor.
Vjesnik za arheologiju i historiju dalmatinsku, Split.
Zbornik radova Vizantolo{kog instituta,
Beograd.
Zbornik radova Narodnog muzeja u ^a~ku, ^a~ak.
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244
Rezime:
OLIVERA ILI]
OLIVERA ILI], Arheolo{ki institut, Beograd
RANOHRI[]ANSKE KRSTIONICE
U SEVERNOM ILIRIKU
Ranohri{}anske krstionice, wihov polo`aj i izgled osvetqavaju na svoj na~in ne samo mesto i zna~aj crkvene gra|evine kojoj pripadaju i sa kojom su u vezi, ve} i lokalne
specifi~nosti povezane sa na~inom kr{tavawa koje se ~esto reflektuju u wihovom prostornom sklopu. Spomenici
prezentovani u ovom radu poti~u iz Srbije i Crne Gore ~ija teritorija je tokom kasnoanti~kog i ranovizantijskog
perioda ulazila u sastav severnog dela prefekture Ilirik
(Praefectura praetorio per Illyricum).
Klasifikaciju krstionica mogu}e je izvr{titi na
osnovu tipololo{kih i hronolo{kih merila. Prema tipolo{kim karakteristikama izdvajaju se dva osnovna tipa:
– krstionice koje su predstavqale samostalan, centralno gra|en prostor koji okru`uje piscinu. Kod nas je takav
slu~aj zabele`en jedino u Cari~inom Gradu gde je krstionica postavqena neposredno uz episkopsku baziliku;
– krstionice koje su predstavqale konstrukciju inkorporiranu u samu crkvenu gra|evinu. Ovaj tip krstionica je
naj~e{}i na prostoru centralnog Balkana. Me|u wima mo`emo tako|e izdvojiti dva tipa u odnosu na wihov polo`aj
prema samoj crkvenoj gra|evini:
– krstionice neposredno vezane uz narteks crkvene
gra|evine, naj~e{}e instalirane u severnom ili ju`nom
kompartimentu narteksa;
– krstionice postavqene u samom naosu crkve i to
prete`no u isto~nom delu, bli`e oltaru.
Posebno treba izdvojiti krstionicu ~etvorolisnog
oblika oblika sme{tenu uz ju`ni brod velike trobrodne
bazilike III u Gamzigradu (Romuliana).
Ovde treba pomenuti i problem pastoforija sa mawim
apsidalnim zavr{ecima na isto~noj strani koje su najverovatnije predstavqali honefterione. Ove pastoforije su
uglavnom bile snabdevene vodovodnim instalacijama.
Piscine se pojavquju u razli~itim oblicima, od kojih je naj~e{}i u formi krsta (sa gorwim otvorom tako|e u
obliku krsta ili kvadrata). Pored krstoobraznih postoje i
piscine kru`nog oblika.
Prilaz piscini naj~e{}e je re{avan konstrukcijom
dvojnog stepeni{ta. Kod nas su stepenice sa~uvane u krstionici crkve u Velikom Gradcu (Taliata), u Gamzigradu u bazilici II, u Cari~inom Gradu, u Doqanima kod Dukqe.
Dimenzije piscina mogu se znatno razlikovati {to
ukazuje da su u periodu od IV do kraja VI veka paralelno
funkcionisala dva razli~ita obreda kr{tavawa, immersio
i aspersio.
U ve}ini slu~ajeva krstionice sa na{eg podru~ja karakteri{u jednostavna arhitektonska re{ewa i oskudno
ili potpuno nepostojawe dekorativnih elemenata. Redak
primer sa sa~uvanim mozai~nim podom i arhitektonskom
dekorativnom plastikom zabele`en je jedino u Cari~inom
Gradu.
Pored krstionica koje poti~u iz episkopskih centara
(Cari~ini Grad, Bela Palanka, Doqani u blizini Dukqe),
zabele`eno je i pristustvo krstionica u crkvama podignutim na Dunavskom limesu ili Babotincu kod Prokupqa.
Ovi primeri ukazuju na postojawe velikog broja katihumena, {to je dovelo do prenosa episkopskih ovla{}ewa na
druga sve{tena lica. Postojawe krstionica tzv. ruralnog
tipa je pojava koja je prisutna na ~itavom prostoru Balkana. Rasprostrawenost ovih krstionica bila je u skladu sa
te`wom Justinijana I, velikog hri{}anskog vladara, da kona~no dovr{i proces hristijanizacije neurbanizovanih
delova Balkanskog poluostrva. Invazijom varvarskih plemena sa severa krajem VI i po~etkom VII veka, pre svega
Avara i Slovena, ovaj relativno dug proces hristijanizacije paganskog, ve} uveliko romanizovanog, autohtonog etnosa bio je prekinut u svojoj zavr{noj fazi, kada je uni{tena
celokupna urbana struktura prefekture Ilirik, a samim
tim i ve} prili~no rasprostrawena i ~vrsto formirana
crkvena organizacija.